About Me

I finally made it to the adventure of a lifetime and now I'm a citizen of the World. Indy author, blogger, in love with being an author - Mom of two grown children and widow of the most wonderful man to ever live - Devon "Pete" Hall.

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

It can be said that convenience is a wonderful thing, and it
truly can be, however my recent travel by bus from Billings, Montana back to
Sacramento, California is a testament to not living a convenient life.

The Greyhound Bus trip was a total of 34 hours and
supplemented by two 14-passenger vans and a brand new experience for me in the
US. I had taken several longish bus rides in SE Asia, but 11 hours was the
topper. I was actually looking forward to this adventure and challenge.

Kelvin, Dale and Taylor

Sleep was nearly impossible for me, so I managed about 5
hours the entire trip. I had considerate seat mates the whole way and really
enjoyed one of them, Kelvin from Nevada. We got close enough while riding that
we were the seeds of a small group, who watched each other’s things during a
six-hour layover in Salt Lake City. Kelvin was my junior by a few years, but
Taylor was significantly younger at 17. The Salt Lake City security guard asked
me, Kelvin and Dale (a fella more my age whom we had drawn in to our clan an hour
earlier) to watch over her a bit. So the four of us passed our time together,
bonding, giggling and trying the bus station food offerings, limited as they
were.

A couple of hours before I thought I would land in
Roseville, California, I discovered the bus didn’t stop there and I would be dropped
off near downtown Sacramento. I panicked a bit – not wanting to incur a $50
taxi ride to my sister’s house on the other side of Metro Sac. I
googled transportation options from the bus station and realized the light rail
was a mere block away so I relaxed and ultimately hopped onboard.

When I changed trains about 30 minutes later, I met and
talked to a homeless woman, Deb, for a good twenty minutes and it truly was a
GOOD talk. At the end, she thanked me for treating her like a person. I nearly
cried but instead answered, “Well, you are a person!” I asked her if I could
give her a few dollars as respectfully as I could. She accepted, saying “You
didn’t have to do that.”

When I got to my stop just a 1/2 mile from my sister’s house, I
had to borrow a phone from a stranger. Although, borrowing phones is a well-known
scam, the gentleman was kind and trusted me. I left a message for my sister
that I would wait 20 minutes and if she didn’t come I’d start walking.

A few minutes later, I began a long haul uphill dragging my
rolling suitcase with a duffel atop it and it wasn’t but a few blocks down the
road when I stopped to catch my breath. Moments later, a cab pulled up with a
driver from India asking if I needed a ride. I answered “yes, please” but told
him I needed to go to an ATM because I didn’t have much money on me. He tried
to refuse my money, saying he was just concerned about me, but I did give him the
$5 I had on me. He was incredibly sweet to me.

In the course of a very inconvenient journey; I met three
wonderful fellow bus riders, cheerful and resilient Deb, a trusting stranger
with a phone and someone from a part of the world I’ve just visited who offered
me a free ride just because.